Submitted by Mr_niceguy0 t3_z12oyj in books

I recently read the giver and personally I think it’s pretty good however I tried to start reading gathering blue and I thought it wasn’t great, furthermore my friend read all of them and said all the books after the first one are bad and ruin the story, so I was just wondering what books have you read with terrible sequels that ruin the books legacy?

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arcoiris2 t1_ix8nc5i wrote

The only one that comes to mind at the moment is To Kill A Mockingbird. I was highly disappointed in Go Set A Watchman by comparison (maybe I'm missing something in my perspective?). I just felt the writing wasn't as good as the first book.

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Mr_niceguy0 OP t1_ix8pi1j wrote

Yeah, some writers i think just make new books to ride off the fame of the last book to make extra cash, I don’t know if that’s why they made go set a watchman but I feel like that’s the reason for most of these disappointing sequels, that or the author got lucky and his first book blew up despite them not being the best author

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ChaosAE t1_ix8prow wrote

Inkheart

A rather fun fantasy story with a neat premise, someone can literally bring stories to life by reading them.

Won’t say it was amazing but was enjoyable. Sequels didn’t know what to do and eventually turned into characters going into stories they read, and it basically becomes discount Alice in wonderland from there imo.

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KoRnEmperor616 t1_ix8r9fr wrote

The Witching Hour from Anne Rice! Then Lasher and Taltos were good but... Definitely subpar.

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ersatzbaronness t1_ix8rti5 wrote

Interview with the Vampire. One could argue its greatness, but it does have some import. ....and a host of absolutely awful sequels.

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LeadingMotive t1_ix8rylp wrote

The Sword of Truth series comes to mind. Books 1-2 were enjoyable, the rest just text-filler level tedious and downright cringeworthy. The price of success, I guess.

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Pickle_12 t1_ix8swnr wrote

Enders Game Dune The Passage by Justin Cronin To Your Scattered Bodies Go by Farmer

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Arrow_from_Artemis t1_ix8uynw wrote

Maze Runner. I wasn't head over heels for the first book, but I enjoyed it for what it was. The sequels were terrible.

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RoseIsBadWolf t1_ix8vbv8 wrote

The Gate Thief by Orson Scott Card was amazing, loved the world and story.

The second book, as far as I can tell, was about how teenagers shouldn't have sex.

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Aggressive-Fee228 t1_ix8y8hr wrote

Hard disagree. I felt Dune Messiah really concluded the story told in Dune. Children of Dune was pretty good, not as good as the first 2 though, but set up God Emperor which is fantastic. A lot of mixed feelings for Heretics and Chapter-House, but books 1-4 are great.

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rckwld t1_ix96ce3 wrote

Lies of Locke Lamora

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CodexRegius t1_ix96yvp wrote

Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C. Clarke.

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RedRiter t1_ix9p7cc wrote

I want to say 'what sequels?' to block out the pain of reading them.

Actually I recall the third one (Garden of Rama) was a big improvement, and made me think maybe Rama 2 was just an awkward mis-step. Then the last one came along and I still don't want to think about it lest it ruin the wonder of the first even further.

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JigglypuffSquirtle t1_ix9qr49 wrote

Sorry to be that person, but it was actually written by a woman! Harper Lee. She died about a year after it came out, the rumours I heard were that they took advantage of the fact she was dying. I never heard the rumours about someone else ghost writing it until today.

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jefrye t1_ix9ys4n wrote

>It certainly wasn't a fame riding situation.

Well arguably it was, but by her publisher/agent/family. It seems like Lee was taken advantage of so that other people could make money.

A lot of people I think realize this, hence it being a controversial release as you pointed out, but a lot of other people just came away with "Atticus is a racist" and that's it.

I do think the manuscript is an interesting insight into her creative process, but it should have been published as such and not as "the never-before-seen prequel to To Kill a Mockingbird!" It also should not have been published until after her death. The audience should have been primarily other writers and academics—not everyone who read TKAM in high school and has little or no understanding of what the manuscript is (and, more importantly, is not).

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jefrye t1_ix9zouu wrote

I really liked the sequels. They were different, and I don't think they're quite as innovative as The Giver, but they were entertaining and explored meaningful themes. Especially Gathering Blue with how it handles disability.

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SubstantialScale9858 t1_ixa09va wrote

If the author is good at their job, they'd know when to pull the plug on their story. Story's have a beginning, middle, and end. Some books make take 5 or more books, some may only need to tell their story in one book, but every book has an end. Some writers just don't know when that is, or don't care, which disappoints everyone in the end.

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78105109105 t1_ixa1hwa wrote

C. Kepnes' "You" was really good, but could've done without the 2nd and 3rd books Hidden Bodies and You Love Me. Same with J. Moyes "Me Before You".

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virtualaenigma t1_ixa4bpl wrote

The Golden Compass.

Lyra was such a great, strong character in the first book.

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ActonofMAM t1_ixakj4k wrote

You'd get a shorter response list by asking "what series that starts with a great book doesn't go steadily downhill the longer the series gets?"

Edited to add: I'm a fan of the 50-odd volume "In Death" mystery series by JD Robb/Nora Roberts. In my opinion, that one holds steady throughout. Started as a good absorbing comfort read, still is. Never Great but still good.

But mysteries benefit from their structure in that way. Each book naturally has its own internal complete story: crime committed, crime investigated, crime solved. But there's also room for the established characters, normally the investigators and their social circle to grow and develop. The In Death books are police procedurals, which also helps. You don't risk the "How many people near Jessica Fletcher get murdered every year? Is she doing it herself?" problem.

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TVxStrange t1_ixaoxy9 wrote

Ready Player One was a fun, nostalgia trip. Ready Player Two was an abomination.

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Asecularist t1_ixb2glk wrote

The Bible. Quran and BOM just aren't inspired

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SpookyIsAsSpookyDoes t1_ixbaz89 wrote

I loved, loved, loved "Dragons of Autumn Twilight" by Weis and Hickman when I was younger and really struggled getting through "Winter Night" and "Spring Dawning"

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World_in_my_eyes t1_ixbct7c wrote

I was so obsessed with Anne Rice’s works as a teenager and then I felt obligated to keep reading her newer works even though I didn’t enjoy them anymore. Interview was definitely the best of the vampire novels.

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Thechaospixie t1_ixbdgom wrote

Divergent-1st great, 2nd ok, 3rd terrible

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ninalab t1_ixbik4b wrote

Outlander for me was a great book, never finished the series they just drag on.

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VerbalAcrobatics t1_ixby8be wrote

Interview with the Vampire is great, but The Vampire Lestat is the peak of the series, in my opinion. It's a much more interesting protagonist, and much more fun that the depths of despair dredged in the first book.

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Apprehensive_Tone_55 t1_ixc1seb wrote

Yes it does 😂😂 it says Episode VI of STAR WARS, 5 comes after 4 last i checked. The Quran doesn’t say “Bible 2” multiple religious texts from different religions doesn’t meant sequels that’s so stupid 😂

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KaidenGuhle_is_Jesus t1_ixc1w96 wrote

The hunger games, the proper ending was katniss and Petra killing themselves causing the rebellion in the epilogue, but of course they have to franchise everything

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BodineCity t1_ixc7xea wrote

I hope nobody says Remembrance of Earth's Past (AKA The Three Body Problem series) because I really want to read Dark Forest and Death's End. But if they suck, I won't bother.

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lattewithsprinkles t1_ixcmx77 wrote

Honestly Harry Potter books, they just started to run out of ideas. KILL ME HARRY POTTER FANS

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not_dead_7214 t1_ixcqoy1 wrote

I kind of agree with the sentiment regarding the following books after The Giver itself because the stories were not as tied as anyone would expect sequels to be. But I do have to mention the third book - Messenger - because I love that part of the whole quartet series -- and it was closely tied to The Giver as compared to Gathering Blue (the second book) -- since it gave justice to the main character, and it has the arc that I did not expect the series would actually touch on. Also, like The Giver, Messenger can be a stand-alone book :)

Other than The Giver quartet, I haven't really read many book series that ruin the book's legacy. Everyday series by David Levithan was really good, and The Secrets of the Immortal Nicolas Flamel was such a fantastic read.

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not_dead_7214 t1_ixcr09m wrote

Oh! I remember one. If I Stay!!! This first book really got me on a rollercoaster ride of emotions, but the sequel did not exactly grasp my love for the story plot. I believe it would have been better if it was just stand-alone.

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WritingAviatrix t1_ixcxsrn wrote

The sequel to 101 Dalmatians is insane like you wouldn’t believe.

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ZaphodG t1_ixehh76 wrote

I re-read Messiah and Children recently probably for the last time. I’ll certainly re-read Dune again. IMO, they aren’t as good but it’s not as bad as some of the horrible sequels mentioned here. Ready Player Two tops my list.

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